| Literature DB >> 30486867 |
Rosalind McCollum1, Miriam Taegtmeyer2, Lilian Otiso3, Nelly Muturi3, Edwine Barasa4,5, Sassy Molyneux6,7, Tim Martineau2, Sally Theobald2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Practices of power lie at the heart of policy processes. In both devolution and priority-setting, actors seek to exert power through influence and control over material, human, intellectual and financial resources. Priority-setting arises as a consequence of the needs and demand exceeding the resources available, requiring some means of choosing between competing demands. This paper examines the use of power within priority-setting processes for healthcare resources at sub-national level, following devolution in Kenya.Entities:
Keywords: Devolution; Kenya; Power; Priority-setting
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30486867 PMCID: PMC6264027 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-018-3706-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Forms of power and their expression in Kenya
| Form of power | Definition (Veneklasen, 2002) | Expression in Kenya |
|---|---|---|
| Power over | Power is viewed as ‘zero-sum’ where the more power one person has than the less the other has. Having power involved taking it from someone else and then using it to dominate and prevent others from gaining it. | Power over was typically exerted by state actors at the top of the institutional hierarchy within the county, by the governor, the county executive committee member for health and the members of county assembly, with some county executive committee members for health adopting an authoritarian approach, limiting sharing of knowledge and information. |
| Power with | Based on mutual support and collaboration to build collective strength. It helps build bridges and promote more equitable relations | Mechanisms for power with have been introduced according to the Constitution, e.g. public participation meetings. However, failure to address norms which limit power within e.g. patriarchal norms, have led to limited active participation from many citizens, leaving these forums open to elite capture and limiting opportunities for power with. |
| Power to act | Refers to the potential of every person to shape their life. | Outside of county level technical and political actors, other potential decision makers such as health workers, sub-county actors and community members appear to have limited power to act, with limited meaningful participation. |
| Power within | Relates to a person’s sense of self-worth, values and self-knowledge, having the capacity to have hope and affirming dignity and fulfilment. | Power within relates closely with how forces and structures, such as patriarchy and patronage remain unaddressed and as a consequence there has been limited scope for empowerment and increasing citizens power within to enable them to fully engage with priority-setting (see power with above). |
Fig. 1Pre (left) and post (right) devolution health systems structures in Kenya. Green arrows indicate governance, black lines indicate supervision pathways, red arrows indicate flow of funding. The black dotted line between national and county indicates the new relationship between national and county governments. Red box surrounding some boxes indicates structures which receive funding directly from national level
Dimensions of Gaventa’s power cube (Barasa et al. 2016; Rowlands 1997; Veneklasen et al. 2002)
| Spaces for power | |
|---|---|
| Closed spaces | Elites make decisions behind closed doors, which in Kenya include discussions between county executive committee members and the governor or among members of county assembly; |
| Invited spaces | Citizens are invited to participate by authorities, which in Kenya includes the public participation forums; |
| Claimed spaces | Less powerful actors claim spaces from the power holders, which in Kenya includes the use of social media platforms by citizens to raise awareness about poor quality services. |
| Places for power | |
| Global | Globalisation shifts traditional understandings of the location and exercise of power. Global actors, forces and structures in turn influence and shape national and local level power relationships. In Kenya this includes international pressure for devolution. |
| National County Health worker | The role of the national level in power dynamics, influences the legitimacy and power dynamics at other (sub-national) and local levels. Decentralisation, transforms national and local power relationships. |
| Local | Local levels may be dependent on other levels for the extent to which power is legitimated. In Kenya, community level actors may be involved with priority-setting through public participation forums, or through community representation in other existing committees at community and facility levels. |
| Forms and visibility of power | |
| Visible power’ | Observable decision making. This includes the visible and definable rules, structures, authorities, institutions and procedures for decision-making. Strategies targeting this level seek to change the ‘who, how and what’ to increase accountability of priority-setting processes. |
| ‘Hidden power’ | Setting the political agenda, is less obvious. Certain powerful people and institutions maintain their influence by controlling who is involved with decision-making and what is on the agenda. Actions to address this level include empowering advocacy strategies that seek to strengthen organisations of poor and marginalised people to influence the way in which political agenda is shaped. |
| ‘Invisible power’ | Shaping meaning and what is important. Problems and issues are kept from the minds of the actors involved, by influencing how they think about their place in the world and controlling access to information, so that people are unable to make informed choices. In this dimension power operates at a deeper ‘invisible’ level, so that actors may unwittingly follow against their own best interests, thereby avoiding conflict by making it impossible for people to imagine anything different to the status quo. Power is closely associated with ideology. Beliefs, values, attitudes and ways of analysing life, enforced by structures such as family, education system, religion, the media, the economy and the state, tend to reinforce the dominant ideology and power of the dominant groups within it. Change strategies at this level target social and political culture and individual consciousness. |
Fig. 2Power interfaces between decision-making actors (modified Brinkerhoff and Bossert, 2008)
Fig. 3Gaventa’s power cube (2006)